ABSTRACT

First published in 1981, this book reassesses the case of Sacco and Vanzetti, two Italian immigrant anarchists living in Boston in 1920. The pair were accused of a payroll robbery and the murder of two guards for which they were arrested and, after a long trial based on inadequate and prejudiced evidence, executed in 1927. In 1977, on the fiftieth anniversary of their deaths, the Commonwealth of Massachusettes issued a proclamation which acknowledged a miscarriage of justice. The Black Flag provides an account of the controversial trial and a re-evaluation of the celebrated case of the Commonwealth’s decision. Brian Jackson puts the trial in the social context of the period and exposes the nature of anarchism by looking at the lives of two of its exponents, resulting in a moving exploration of a series of events that continue to trouble the conscience of America.

part |2 pages

Part one A winter's tale

chapter 1|7 pages

Christmas Eve 1919

chapter 2|8 pages

Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti

chapter 3|11 pages

A crime punishable by death

chapter 4|20 pages

Cross-examination

chapter 5|21 pages

Eels and the electric chair

chapter 6|12 pages

In Death Row

chapter |3 pages

Interlude A long shadow

part |2 pages

Part two Half a century later

chapter 7|17 pages

In State House

chapter 8|16 pages

Little secrets in little boxes

chapter 9|9 pages

'There seemed to be no doubt at all'

chapter 10|12 pages

'Have you agreed upon your verdict?'

chapter 11|22 pages

Culture or anarchy

chapter 12|7 pages

'The storming of heaven'

chapter 2|6 pages

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